Answers to Questions about Chiropractic:
Did an Atlas Adjustment Cure My Back Pain?

Samuel Homola, D.C.

Question

About years ago, I had lower back pain on the right side,
possibly related to being thrown from horse rides, twice. Upon
suggestion, I went to a chiropractor who was trained in "scientific
chiropractic." After some study of "leg alignment"
(my characterization), weight distribution per leg, and very particular
x-ray studies of my neck, he did an adjustment of my atlas. He
did this after careful positioning of my body (on support and
with measurement) by using his index finger (after carefully positioning
myself much like a golfer would prepare for a long putt) to apply
some adjustment to the atlas. The pain was relieved but returned
and was treated again. The time between treatments became longer
and longer. It's now six years or more since I've had reason to
see him for a treatment or re-evaluation. Several questions occur
to me now:

Was the relief and cure I experienced real, or was it something
that I just outgrew?

Do you have a comment on this modality of treatment?

Would you describe reasons and appropriate modalities for
atlas adjustments?

Answer

The atlas is the highest spinal bone in the neck and has no
connection to any structure that could cause back pain. Thus
there is no reason to believe that an "atlas misalignment"
could cause low-back pain. It seems likely that your recovery
from back pain was a natural process that had nothing to do with
the hocus-pocus of measuring and adjusting your atlas.

There are occasions when neck symptoms caused by locking or
fixation of the atlas or some other joint in the neck can be
relieved with manual manipulation or mobilization of the neck.
But only a few treatments would be required.

Manipulation of the neck as a treatment for low-back pain—or when there are no neck-related symptoms—is a useless
and unscientific procedure that poses unnecessary risk to sensitive
joints and blood vessels in the neck.

Common sense, as exercised in this case, will often raise
questions about treatment methods that are unnecessary or inappropriate

_________________

Dr. Homola is a second-generation chiropractor who has dedicated
himself to defining the proper limits on chiropractic and to educating
consumers and professionals about the field. His 1963 book Bonesetting, Chiropractic, and Cultism
supported the appropriate use of spinal manipulation but renounced
chiropractic dogma. His 1999 book Inside
Chiropractic: A Patient's Guide provides an incisive look
at chiropractic's history, benefits, and shortcomings. Now retired
after 43 years of practice, he lives in Panama City, Florida.